Musings

It's been said that if you do not know where you are coming from, then you do not know where you are going. That is part of the
inspiration for my genealogy research. My families have lived through rough times. My father lost his mother when he was only 3
years old, and orphaned when his father died when he was only 14 years old with 6 other siblings. His oldest brother died under
mysterious circumstances on his 7th birthday. The younger children spent a year or so in the Catholic Charities orphanage. His
stepmother has been described by an older brother as right out of Cinderella. He
found one of my uncles on his hands and knees scrubbing the floor while the stepmothers daughters were sitting around doing nothing.
My uncle then took his younger brother home to live with him in Columbus, Ohio. My dad would go to the grocery store to buy pop to
bring home, where his stepmother gave it to her daughters, then wouldn't let my dad have any. I doubt my dad knew that his grandfather
also lost his mother at an early age after she had 14 children. My mother's father was also an orphan before his teen years, yet
went on to have 15 children, 13 who lived to marry and have children. He used to say he wouldn't trade them for a million dollars.
He died in 1977 at age 90 when a million dollars was still a lot of money. In so many ways, I feel like an under achiever compared
to my ancestors. They did so much, with so little.

Typically, American's don't think of ourselves as an empire like the British who used to claim the sun never set on the
British Empire. Perhaps we need to rethink our world position if Paul Campos is correct that the United States has
800 military bases
in 130 foreign countries.
Perhaps this is why a large part of the world does not like our government. If foreign troops who looked and acted different from
us were stationed in our country, expected us to know and speak their language, I don't think we would be too happy about it
anymore that some people around the world are towards our troops in their country.

We live in a time when professional entertainers and sports figures, not to mention corporate CEO's make as much or more in
a year than the local school corporation budget for building maintenance, teacher and administrator salaries while educating
30,000 students, many who don't meet todays high education standards. Sports teams expect tax payer funded modern stadiums less
than 20 years old or they will take their toys and move somewhere else. What major corporation builds a new store, shopping mall,
office building, or factory without corporate welfare in the form of tax breaks and preferential tax treatment? The trucking industry
depends on taxpayer funded highways, airlines expect taxpayer funded airports, security, and traffic controllers, but don't we
dare try to fund mass transit at taxpayer expense. The public air waves pollute our minds with words and skin, leaving less and
less to the imagination. Sex is entertainment and we are told to change the channel or look the other way if we don't like it.
There is something morally wrong when society values entertainment and corporate profit more highly than educating or economically
providing an affordable standard of living for citizens. We fund the terrorists through over priced oil and send our manufacturing
base to Communist China. Is this why our ancestors suffered the inhumanity of the dark ages and crusades of Europe, then struggled
in the wilderness of North America to have their dependents let it all slip away back to a time of haves and have nots? DNA testing
will eventually show just how closely related we really are. The entertainers, CEO's, and multinational corporations are exploiting
and profiting on the backs of their own relatives while our politicians line their nests.

Studying my ancestry since 1993, I can not help but wonder how my life would have been different if I had known
growing up what I know now. What if I had known a Thomas FOLLIS was a burgess in 1642
Jamestown the first permanent English settlement in America founded May 14, 1607.
How different it might have been in elementary school if I had known I had maternal ancestor THURSTON's
arriving in Massachusetts in 1637 only 17 years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in December 1620
aboard the Mayflower. Did they witness or at least know about the Salem Witch Trials?
Did my WEBB families really arrive in 1620 from a long line of British Knights and
connect us with President Lyndon Baines Johnson and the great playwright William Shakespeare?

Would I have paid more attention to our Colonial history if I had known that three-fourth's of my ancestors where in America
during the Colonial period prior to the Revolutionary War in 1776? Would it have made a difference if I had known I was a descendant
of at least seven ancestors who fought in the Revolutionary War? Would I have been more
observant and asked more questions in junior high school when we visited Washington D.C. and Colonial Williamsburg
if I had known that Thomas FOLLIS the burgess was in 1642 James
City? Or a Jacob FALLIS posted a found ad about a horse in the 1700's Williamsburg newspaper? Or that my FOLLIS ancestors had
been in 1750's Virginia along with so many of my other families.

How different would my interest in American history be if I had known there is reliable evidence that my FOLLIS families
were at least acquaintances of George WASHINGTON the father of
our country. George Washington was a surveyor for Lord Fairfax in Frederick County, Virginia at age 16 from 1748-1752, his first
occupation, at the same time my FOLLIS families were purchasing land in Frederick County.
George Washington was then Burgess from Winchester, the county seat, from 1758-1765. It seems reasonable the FOLLIS family would
know the county surveyor and burgess as all land had to be recorded at the county courthouse at the time when the population would
have been very small. How different if I had known my fifth great-grandfather Simon ESSIG who
served in the Revolutionary War may have served at the Battle of Trenton when George
Washington crossed the Delaware River remembered in the famous painting.
What would I have thought if I had known sixth great-grandfather Henry LANDIS built a
house in 1750 Amwell, New Jersey that is the oldest house still standing in the township
where Lafayette, who helped secure France's
aid in helping the United States win its independence from Britain, had recuperated while recovering from Valley Forge
the Winter of 1777.

How different the study of Native American Indian's would have seemed if I had known my fourth
great-grandfather Benjamin FOREMAN's wife Nancy is thought of have been
killed by Indian's in Virginia or Kentucky and his brother William was massacred in 1777 at Fort FORMAN
in Frederick County, Virginia? My TIMMONS family married into the FOREMAN family
and one of the sibling lines has an Indian tribe on their tombstone, whose mother is thought to be an Indian with a photograph that
supports the idea.

Because my mother was raised on a farm I was always casually interested in the history of farming. I did not really appreciate
the hard work my ancestors had to endure in removing the primeval forests that covered the land they pioneered as the Indians were
driven further west.

How different it might have to been to realize that several distant cousins are known to have made the difficult
travels from Indiana to California in 1849 during the gold rush in seeking their fortunes before returning to
the farm life. Related by marriage, three CRABILL brother's in Whitley County joined the gold rush then returned to Indiana.
Samuel EIKENBARY, a first cousin five times removed, moved to Iowa then Nebraska. He was a '49er, led the
"Ikenberry Party" to California, made and lost $20,000
returned to Nebraska and was a member of the first Nebraska territorial Assembly and of the Constitutional Convention. Samuel's
cousin's the Miller brothers stayed in California, opened
a meat market, with William MILLER becoming a member of the first California Senate.

Would my interest in the Civil War have been different if I had known relative's
names who fought in the Civil War? How different it would have been when teacher's talked about father's fighting against sons,
and brothers against brother, or cousin against cousin been different if I had known about all of the FALLIS - FOLLIS lists of Union and Confederate soldiers.

Interesting to know that Samuel MILLER a "shirt tail" relative through marriages of distant cousin's in the Union County,
Indiana Four Mile Church of the Brethren families designed and built some of the earliest buildings on Miami, Ohio University
campus, was a trustee in the Village of Chicago and built the Lighthouse at Michigan City, Indiana now a state historical monument.

Would the disease discussions in biology been different had I known the names of ancestors who actually
endured the long months and years suffering towards a slow death? This was the time before antibiotics that we now have that easily
treat cholera, pneumonia, scarlet fever, smallpox, tetanus, typhoid, tuberculosis and other seemingly foreign diseases. These were
probably considered just a part of life, like when I grew up with measles and mumps considered a part of a normal childhood, now
treated as diseases to be avoided. We now worry about terrorist attacks, natural disasters, HIV AIDS and flu pandemic, yet I have
only found one relative whose wife died in the 1918 flu pandemic and have not found any relatives who died in a flood, tornado or
earthquake.

I grew up during the Cold War during the
Communist Era in the 1950's and 1960's when the world feared a nuclear war with Communist Soviet Union or China. I barely
remember the 1960's Bay of Pigsinvasion with Communist Cuba when school
children from Florida were sent to school in Indiana out of fear of an impending war which did not happen. I was too young to
understand, but vaguely remember it.

I vaguely remember uncle's talking about the Korean War
often called "the Forgotten War" in which the United States
fought to stop Communist China from overtaking all of Korea at a cost of 54,000 American lives. I reached the age of majority
during the Vietnam War and vividly remember the daily casualty counts on
television which totaled over 58,000 American dead, the televised war protests highlighted by the 1968 Democratic Convention
fiasco in Chicago and the Kent StateMassacre in
May 1970.

In 1969 America was trying again to stop the spread of Communist China into Vietnam as they had tried to do in Korea, but had
to hold a lottery
to select troops. In 1969 my birthdate was in the top 5, when I was eligible for the final draft my birthdate was in the bottom 5,
I still don't know what I would have done if I was drafted. Now, knowing my Quaker and Church of the Brethren ancestry, it seems
natural to be opposed to government and war. In 2006 we still had 35,000 troops in Korea, but none in Vietnam. I had a friend in
college whose brother
went to Vietnam where he was killed May 13, 1969 and
never came home. America chose to forget the MIA's,
Missing In Action soldiers
who never came home from Vietnam. As of November 2001 there
were still 1,948 missing soldiers from the War in Vietnam.

I was amazed in 1980 when spending a winter in Florida I encountered some "good old southern boys" who when they found out
I was from Indiana began to call me a "Yankee". They proceeded on a daily basis to act as if the Civil War had ended last week. You
would have thought they or their fathers had fought in a war that had actually ended over 100 years and 4 generations before
they were born.

We often hear politicians talk about their Christian moral values, yet when they are caught doing something wrong their first
comment is they did nothing illegal. Romans 13-15
discusses following the rules of government, paying your taxes to government because God created all governments. It further says not to criticize fellow
Christian's if they worship and eat
foods different
from your beliefs and do as others request whether you believe as they do simply to promote harmony. Sure makes me wonder if those
politicians and other Christian's who claim moral superiority ever read the Bible they claim to believe in.

Do genealogy long enough and you will realize we are related by blood and marriage to most
of the people around us. Eventually DNA testing will shock some people when they find out who their DNA relatives are. A few years
ago there was controversy over Sally Hemings
slave descendants of third President Thomas Jefferson
wanting recognition. Recently Civil Rights Activist
the Reverend Al Sharpton found out his
slave ancestors were owned by
ancestors of deceased white segregationist Senator Strom Thurmond
of South Carolina. This may only be the first of many high profile surprises.